
Longevity & Aging Series (S4, E2): Dr. David Gems
Mar 19, 2026
42:12
Dr. David Gems from University College London joins new host Dr. Yuan Zhao from Queen Mary University of London to discuss a review they co-authored in Volume 17, Issue 12 of Aging-US, titled “Aging as a multifactorial disorder with two stages.”
DOI - https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.206339
Corresponding author - David Gems - david.gems@ucl.ac.uk
Video interview - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqZuAm7I4oQ
Longevity & Aging Series - https://www.aging-us.com/longevity
About Dr. Yuan Zhao - https://www.qmul.ac.uk/sbbs/staff/yuan-zhao.html
Abstract video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4TSI4Ot3yM
Abstract
Aging (senescence) is characterized by development of diverse senescent pathologies and diseases, leading eventually to death. The major diseases of aging, including cardiovascular disease, cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), are multifactorial disorders, resulting from complex interactions between multiple etiologies. Here we propose a general account of how different determinants of aging can interact to generate late-life disease. This account, initially drawn from studies of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, depicts senescence as the product of a two-stage process. The first stage involves the diverse causes of disease prior to aging, that cause disruption of normal biological function. These include infection, mechanical injury and mutation (somatic and inherited). Second, etiologies largely confined to aging: deleterious, late-life consequences of evolved wild-type gene action, including antagonistic pleiotropy. Prior to aging, diverse insults lead to accumulation of various forms of injury that is largely contained, preventing progression to major pathology. In later life, wild-type gene action causes loss of containment of latent disruptions, which form foci for pathology development. Pathologies discussed here include osteoarthritis, cancer, late-life recrudescence of infection, and consequences of late-acting deleterious mutations. Such latent injury foci are analogous to seeds which in later life, in the context of programmatic senescent changes, germinate and develop into disease.
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Keywords - aging, C. elegans, disease, hyperfunction, multifactorial model
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